Foreign Policy

I receive a regular email from a service that monitors the Oklahoma state legislature. Reading a list of bills recently passed by committee, I noticed something called the Transparency Accountability and Innovation in Oklahoma State Government 2.0 Act of 2013. It is HB1003, introduced by Representative Murphey. I looked it up on the legislature’s Bill Information site and found this bill summary:

HB 1003, as introduced, creates the Transparency, Accountability and Innovation in Oklahoma State Government 2.0 Act of 2013 and is a shell bill.

It turns out that this is a pretty detailed summary, since the full text of the bill is as follows:

BE IT ENACTED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA:

SECTION 1. NEW LAW A new section of law not to becodified in the Oklahoma Statutes reads as follows:

This act shall be known and may be cited as the “Transparency,Accountability and Innovation in Oklahoma State Government 2.0 Actof 2013”.

SECTION 2. This act shall become effective November 1, 2013.

When the bill summary refers to HB1003 as a “shell bill,” it means that the guts will be added at a later time. Often, the majority party will use this technique to avoid public scrutiny. There will be a shell bill that will just sit until near the end of the legislative session, when the contents will be added and the bill will be quickly and quietly passed. Sometimes, the added contents have little or no relation to the original title of the shell bill.

It does not appear that this is what is happening with HB1003. The contents have already been filled in by amendment and this was done prior to the bill being approved in committee. As amended, the bill does not appear to be anything sinister. But I still found it amusing that a bill with “Transparency . . . in Oklahoma State Government” in its title starts out as a shell bill that offers no clues as to its true purpose.

For the past few years, we in the liberty movement have had the luxury of being able to stand on the outside and lob in grenades at America’s corrupt foreign policy. But now, with one of our own, Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky as a potential president, we have to face the reality of how […]

A government lawyer’s attempt to get dismissed nearly $700 in traffic tickets given to the U.S. Postal Service is being met with a hearty and humorous, Heck no.

In a Jan. 22 letter sent to both the city of East Cleveland, Ohio, and the company that operates the city’s photo-enforcement program, Postal Service attorney Jennifer S. Breslin says two school-zone speeding citations and five red-light infractions by postal trucks in December should be ignored.

“In providing mail service across the country, the Postal Service attempts to work within local and state laws and regulations, when feasible,” wrote Breslin, after reminding “To Whom It May Concern” that postal workers promptly deliver over 200 billion pieces of mail annually.“However, as you are probably aware, the Postal Service enjoys federal immunity from state and local regulation,” she continued.

That last bit did not go over well with American Traffic Solutions (ATS), the Arizona-based company that enforces East Cleveland’s camera citations.

“By attempting to hide behind an immunity claim, you are aiding and abetting your drivers in their blatant disregard for the traffic laws in East Cleveland, which have endangered other drivers, pedestrians and school children,” ATS attorney George Hittner wrote in his three-page response to Breslin, who received it on Thursday. (He also cc’d the postmaster general, two U.S. representatives and two senators.)

The response to the imperious letter from the Postal lawyer is enjoyable, but I would appreciate it more if it was not coming from a private company. Something is askew when local government not only contracts out the enforcement of traffic laws to a corporation, but also relies upon that corporation to defend its own sovereignty.

Last night, Congressman Jim Bridenstine conducted a town hall meeting at Wesleyan University in Bartlesville. Before it started, question cards were handed out to everyone who wanted one. A member of Bridenstine’s staff assured the audience that every submitted question would be answered; if the one-hour time allotted for the meeting proved to be insufficient, then all remaining questions would be answered by email. Fortunately, the congressman was able to get to all the questions. (No rebuttals or follow-ups from the questioners were permitted.)

I commend Congressman Bridenstine for conducting the town hall meeting and for beginning it with a thorough, straight-forward explanation of all the votes he has cast in the House. I also appreciate his commitment to answer any and all questions. However, I was not satisfied with the answer he gave to the question that I submitted. Since no rebuttal was allowed, I will make it here. (If I’m lucky, it will at least be read by my wife.)

Here is my question:

Why fear the sequester? It is the only realistic chance we have of getting spending cuts. Republicans seem to fear cuts to defense, but even after the sequester, the U.S. will be spending more on defense than the next 10 countries combined. Shouldn’t defense spending be cut along with everything else?

Well before my question was read aloud by a member of his staff, Congressman Bridenstine, without prompting, had already addressed the topic of sequestration and made it very clear that he opposes it precisely because it includes cuts to defense. He claimed:

According to Defense Sec. Leon Panetta, the cuts “will hollow out the military.”

According to Sen. Inhofe, more than 26,000 workers in Oklahoma will have to be furloughed as a result of the cuts in defense spending mandated by the sequester.

Bridenstine’s own carrier crew – he loves talking about his carrier crew — has already had to reduce drug interdiction flights because of the spending cuts.

“Our national security is being compromised at this very minute” because of the cuts.

The U.S. is 24th in the world when it comes to defense spending. He then clarified that this is based upon percentage of GDP.

Before we even get to the answer to my question, some fact-checking is in order. The “sequestration” refers to a triggered reduction of expenditures mandated by the Budget Control Act, should the House and Senate fail to agree upon an alternative plan for reducing the annual deficit. The reduction of expenditures is to be $1.2 trillion OVER TEN YEARS. (Despite the wailing over this “draconian” measure, it actually does very little to control the debt. That’s how bad things have gotten.) Of that, $216 billion will come from assumed debt service savings, so we are really talking about $984 billion in cuts. Of the $984 billion in cuts, $492 billion will be defense cuts and the other $492 will be non-defense cuts.

That means that on average, the Defense Department will have to make do with $49.2 billion a year less than it would have otherwise received. So does this constitute a “hollowing out of the military”? For 2012, the budget for the DoD was $530.6 billion, up from $528.2 billion for 2011. Oh, but that does not include spending on the undeclared wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. (War costs are treated as a separate category of spending, as if war is not within the mission of the DoD.) If you include war spending, then the budget for 2011 was around $700 billion. So that means that a $49.2 billion cut would be a 7% reduction. “The Pentagon will still be spending more in 2013 after sequestration than it did in 2006, at the height of the Iraq war,” noted Lawrence Korb, who served as assistant defense secretary under President Reagan.

Consider some other comparisons. Over 10 years, under sequestration, defense increases 18 percent (vs. 20 percent without sequestration). In nominal terms, cumulative nonwar defense spending over the FY2012-FY2021 period will increase to $4.8 trillion with sequestration, as opposed to $5.3 trillion without it. Notice this is “nonwar” spending. According to the Congressional Budget Office, over the same period, the Department of Defense will also spend an additional $400 billion on war. (How much would it be if we didn’t have a Nobel peace prize-winner as president?)

Even if we exclude war spending, defense spending has almost doubled over the past decade. As you can see from the above chart, the sequestration will result in a slight dip before the upward trajectory resumes. This is not a “hollowing out” of our military.

As for Congressman Bridenstine’s claim that defense cuts are already compromising our national security, I would challenge him to identify these “cuts.” Separate and apart from the sequestration, the Budget Control Act called for spending caps that have already gone into effect, but these are caps on the rate of increase. Even with the caps in place, the DoD budget continues to grow at the rate of inflation. This means there have been “cuts” only in the government weasel language of D.C., where a reduction in the rate of increase is called a “cut.” Please tell me Congressman Bridenstine hasn’t adopted the lingo of the appropriators in his first month in office.

As for Sen. Inhofe’s assertion that sequestration will result in 26,000 furloughs in Oklahoma, this is a number he pulled out of the air, or it was fed to him by DoD folks who are in crisis mode, cranking out as many scary scenarios as they can. Furloughs have become the weapons of mass destruction of the budget debate. The prediction assumes there is no fat to be cut at DoD. Maybe Sen. Inhofe needs to read Sen. Coburn’s report on waste in the Defense Department.

Even if the sequester results in a large number of furloughs, or even terminations, this not an argument against the sequester. The Defense Department’s mission is to defend the nation — not to employ the nation.

Congressman Bridenstine’s assertion that 23 other countries spend more on defense was the biggest canard of the night. First, it should be noted that he’s using percentage of GDP as his measurement. Why that is a relevant measurement was not explained. I guess one could argue that the more stuff you have, the more need you have for protection — people in mansions have high fences and security systems. But does that really extend to a nation state? Do we need to double defense spending every time our GDP doubles? Our GDP decreased, last quarter, so does that mean defense spending should go down?

Also, it should be noted once again that we are talking about nonwar defense spending. We must be, otherwise I have no idea where Bridenstine is getting his figures. Here is Wikipedia’s listing of military budgets by country. The number for the U.S. includes war spending, resulting in a figure of 4.7% of GDP. You can see that only about 7 other countries have a higher percentage. Among these countries are Israel (whose spending includes billions of dollars that the U.S. gives to them), Oman, and Eritrea. Should we feel vulnerable because any of these countries spend a greater percentage of their GDP on their military than does the U.S.?

It should also be noted that the numbers for the U.S. include only the money flowing to DoD. There are other billions of dollars that get spent on “defense” but do not flow through DoD, so they don’t get counted. I’m thinking of veteran affairs, intelligence gathering, and the Department of Energy’s overseeing of our nuclear weapons stockpile.

Now consider actual dollars. Look again at the Wikipedia page, or look at this chart:

The U.S. spends 41% of the world’s total. My question to Congressman Bridenstine was premised upon the assertion that the U.S. spends more than the next 10 countries combined, but it is much worse than that. U.S. military spending is three times larger than the combined spending of NATO’s other 27 members. Just who is it that we are frightened of? Maybe it is time to recognize that no other foreign country or alliance can pose a serious military threat to the U.S. Today, true danger lies elsewhere.

Now for Congressman Bridenstines’ answer to my question . . .

He conceded that there is room to make cuts to military spending, pointing out that the military is inefficient and wasteful just like all other segments of the government. (This was inconsistent with all of his other rhetoric up until this point.) But he went on to say that he opposes sequestration because “it cuts defense singularilly [sic].” Of course, this just isn’t so. It is true that a disproportionate amount of the cuts will hit defense, but certainly not all. Half the cuts will be to defense spending and half will be to non-defense spending. Maybe the congressman was simply exaggerating in his speech. In any event, I took his reasoning to be an insincere prop for his position. If cuts to non-defense spending were to be increased so as to make the percentage cuts to defense more proportional, I’m sure he would still be opposed, based upon his earlier statements.

The “peace dividend” we were promised at the end of the Cold War proved to be elusive. Now, despite President Obama’s constant bragging about “winding down two wars,” military spending must still go up and up. Anything less, it seems, would be “hollowing out” our military.

(Maybe it’s a good policy for Bridenstine to not allow rebuttals or follow-up questions. I doubt that I would have been able to get in all of the above.)

This article by Joshua Foer in The New Yorker on constructed languages (e.g., Klingon, Esperanto, etc.) is good journalism, good prose, and an enthralling biographical sketch of a California DMV worker with a passion for linguistics. The DMV worker spent 30 years of his life constructing Ithkuil, a new language. (I’m imagining disgruntled California motorists waiting for their numbers to be called at the DMV during those 30 years.) He publishes a manuscript describing Ithkuil on the Internet. A Russian science magazine does a piece on the manuscript, although the DMV worker is unaware. A couple of years go by and then . . .

In early 2010, he was forwarded an e-mail in patchy English from a Ukrainian academic named Oleg Bakhtiyarov, who introduced himself as the director of a recently formed institution of higher education in Kiev called the University of Effective Development, and as a leading proponent of a philosophical movement called psychonetics. When Quijada Googled both Bakhtiyarov and psychonetics, he found “a sea of impenetrable jargon” about “efforts to develop the human mind using a mix of Western and Eastern ideas,” but nothing that made him suspicious of the group’s motivations. The e-mail invited Quijada to participate in a conference titled “Creative Technology: Perspectives and Means of Development,” which was to be held that July in Elista, the capital of the Republic of Kalmykia, a small semi-autonomous state in the Russian Federation, situated on the arid western shore of the Caspian Sea.

Republic of Kalmykia? Yeah, that was my reaction. Just reading the Wikipedia page on the Republic of Kalmykia, “the only Buddhist region in the West,” is its own adventure. These people got the full Stalin treatment and then some. For no reason at all, here is their flag:

Here is their governor talking about his alien abduction and his plan to build a $10 million building in downtown New York City shaped like a king chess piece.

Anyway, the DMV worker accepts an invitation to go on an all-expense paid trip Kalykia to speak at the conference. There, he’s treated like a rock star because of the language he created.

That’s just the beginning of this tale. You’ll have to read the rest for yourself. (There’s even a special appearance by George Lakoff, whose writings on language and metaphor I discussed in my Sunday morning Moral Imagination class, a couple of years ago.)

Reading The New Yorker article, speaking to how inefficient human languages (the real ones) are, and how much better language could be if it was designed through a rational process, I was reminded of Hayek’s criticisms of philosophies that fail to respect the emergent nature of society. Here’s Wikipedia on “Emergence in Political Philosophy”:

Economist and philosopher Friedrich Hayek wrote about emergence in the context of law, politics, and markets. His theories (Hayek 1973, p. 37) set out the difference between cosmos or “grown order” (that is, emergence), and taxis or “made order”. Hayek dismisses philosophies that do not adequately recognize the emergent nature of society, and which describe it as the conscious creation of a rational agent (be it God, the Sovereign, or any kind of personified body politic, such as Hobbes’s Leviathan). The most important social structures, including the laws (“nomos“) governing the relations between individual persons, are emergent, according to Hayek. While the idea of laws and markets as emergent phenomena comes fairly naturally to an economist, and was indeed present in the works of early economists such as Bernard Mandeville, David Hume, and Adam Smith, Hayek traces the development of ideas based on spontaneous-order throughout the history of Western thought, occasionally going as far back as the presocratics. In this, he follows Karl Popper, who blamed the idea of the state as a made order on Plato in The Open Society and its Enemies. Emergentism is a rejection of the state on the grounds that it is a perversion of the emergent rules that societies form spontaneously. Some 19th-century classical liberals, notably Gustave de Molinari and Frédéric Bastiat, were known advocates of an emergent society and wrote about the concepts in detail. See The Production of Security and The Law, respectively.

Maybe it’s simpler to quote Hayek: “The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine they can design.” Maybe the same could be said about the “conlangers” in The New Yorker piece. So I appreciated the humility of the DMV worker in acknowledging that Ithkuil is an impractical language that would never be adopted. As Lakoff says, it is more of a conceptual-art project.

The attack on our “consulate” in Benghazi, Libya, has rightly drawn the righteous anger of many on the right. The federal government is clearly lying about what it knows, when it knew it, what happened, and why.

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